They are going to raze history and put up a new car wash.
The historic 100-year-old two-story stone structure at 739
Bethlehem Pike, which served for four decades as the Montgomery Township
Consolidated School and later became the site of a fabric store and
Montgomeryville Army-Navy, is being bulldozed currently for a new
3,600-square-foot membership-driven car wash with 23 spaces and double-lane
capacity for 16 vehicles.
Following a public hearing before Montgomery Township Board
of Supervisors in February 2022, Caliber Capital LLC, of Atlanta, received
unanimous land development approval to demolish the existing 46,914-square-foot
building and construct a new 3,680-square-foot one-story Caliber Car Wash with
associated drive aisles, vehicle stacking, and parking. The approval also
tagged on some contingencies, such as always having three or more staff members
on site and giving easements to make entrances and exits onto Bethlehem Pike
and Horsham Road.
The current sight of the one-acre site near Five Points now
leaves a sting in the eyes of many Montgomery Township Historical Society
members, and even former students.
“Kindergarten, first grade and second grades here for me,”
wrote Deb Kinsella on the Knapp
Farm – Montgomery Township Historical Society Facebook post on the
demolition. “Walked up three fields every school day and the Hespell cousins
caught up with the Kreischer cousins on the way. My dad and uncles went here
before us. Even had some of the same teachers as us. The building was made from
Hespell’s Montgomery Stone Quarry. Many good memories.”
“Went to school here for four years. Loved this school. We
had the best playground,” wrote Joanne MacLaughlin Lupino.
According to Montgomery Township Historical Society’s (MTHS)
Fall 2021 newsletter, the history of the building begins Feb. 27, 1771, when
Mordicai Moore, Edward Bartholomew, and John Ambler were chosen as trustees for
the Free School of Montgomery Township. The first teacher, per the newsletter,
was Abram Shoemaker, appointed April 15, 1789, and who was paid 50 pounds (39
of it in gold and silver) per year to teach school.
“After the Revolutionary War, the Continental currency had
collapsed and was considered worthless. Even though the first US mint opened in
1783, it appears that British currency was still being used in our area until
at least the early 1800s,” stated the newsletter article.
The Battle of Gettysburg hero and 1880 Democratic
Presidential nominee Winfield Scott Hancock’s father, B.F. Hancock, taught at
the school from 1823 to 1826, per the historical society.
In addition to the Free School in Montgomery Square — the
current home of Buckman’s Ski Shop on Bethlehem Pike — two other small schoolhouses
were opened: the Montgomeryville School on Cowpath Road and the Horsham Road
School. Both buildings still exist and are now private homes, according to the
society.
The consolidated school building opened in 1923, according
to MTHS Board member Sue Gordon and President Lisa Siegel, and the former three
one-room schoolhouses used at the turn of the century were auctioned two years
later.
When North Penn School District was formed in 1956, the
consolidated school continued to house students. It would not be until 1965
when Montgomery Elementary School opened that its decades as an educational
facility were over.
“It took that long to approve and build the new school,”
said Gordon.
As the decades continued, the building became a gathering
spot for a teen center, before Montgomeryville Fabric Center opened on the
second floor, and Montgomeryville Army-Navy Store opened in the basement. The stores vacated the premises in the early 2000s
and the historic property became the easel for graffiti artists and vandals.
At time of hearing, Caliber Capital LLC was the appellant,
and Provco Pineville 309 Partners LP of Villanova was the owner, according to
public hearing documents.
According to Montgomery County property records, the
$537,470-assessed parcel was sold six months after land development approval to
National Retail Properties Trust for $2.25 million by Caliber Montgomeryville
OP Company LLC. On the same day, according to property records, Provco
Pineville 309 Partners LP sold it to Caliber Montgomeryville OP Company for $2
million. It had been owned by Isaac Friedman since 1983, selling in 2011 for
$955,000.
According to its website, National Retail Properties Trust, now known as NNN REIT Inc., touts 121 Mister Car Wash
properties as one of its top tenants in its retail real estate portfolio.
According to public documents, Caliber describes itself as a
“membership-driven premium express car wash company that was formed with a
mission to provide customers with a car wash that meets the highest caliber of
standards.” The first car wash opened in Florida in 2019, before expanding up
the East Coast.
The parcel is zoned C-Commercial, which permits automatic
and self-serve car washes by conditional use. Caliber Capital received
conditional use approval after December 2021. According to township documents,
the site will be accessed via a shared connecting driveway with the parcel to
its south, using the existing right-in/right-out access point from northbound
Bethlehem Pike/Route 309. There will also be right-in/right-out access from
eastbound Horsham Road/Route 463.
Caliber believes the site is the appropriate location for a
car wash and the use “is consistent with the spirit and intent of the general conditional
use standards and criteria contained in the Montgomery Township Zoning
Ordinance.”
The development of
the site is contrary to what the township defined in its 2008 Comprehensive
Plan, and the Montgomery County Planning Commission even made mention of it in
its report to the township on the project.
“While this proposal on its own will not make or break the
success of a possible town center master planned area, the township should
strongly consider reassessing the suitability of this area for a town center
during its ongoing comprehensive plan update process,” stated the county
planners.
According to the township 2008 Comprehensive Plan vision, the
triangular-shaped area bordered by Bethlehem Pike, Horsham Road and North Wales
Road at Five Points was identified as a future site for a town center, with
“one or more small public open spaces, at least one major public attraction …
mixed uses including retail, be pedestrian-friendly and have attractive
streetscapes.”
Furthermore, the county’s own Montco 2040 comprehensive plan
identified the area as part of a future regional mixed-use center along
Bethlehem Pike. County planners said the car wash project “is compatible with
Montco 2040’s goal of redeveloping older retail properties.”
See also:
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Tail
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Wells
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Krispy
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Knapp Road